The country's largest IT services exporter TCS has reached pre-pandemic levels on the percentage of employees working from offices, a top official has said.
Admitting that it took longer than expected, the Tata group company's chief of human resources Milind Lakkad said the levels have been achieved after 18 months of "hard" efforts.
"We actually have come to the point where we believe we are coming back to almost the same levels as we were pre-pandemic times," Lakkad told PTI.
Stating that "it is kind of a business as usual" for the company employing over 600,000 people, Lakkad said TCS will not track this metric as much in the next couple of quarters.
The number of employees working from offices for five days a week is higher than the 70 per cent it had previously announced, he said, without giving a figure.
It can be noted that the pandemic-induced lockdowns resulted in the entire IT industry's staff delivering work from their homes, but companies, who look at working from offices as more virtuous because of the team building, mentoring, culture deepening aspects, have struggled to get them back to workplaces.
TCS reported a marginal decline in the number of women employees at 35.5 per cent as of June this year, but Lakkad said this is not an aspect of concern for the company and added that it has a slew of policies and measures in place before the pandemic itself wherein it has been flexible as an organisation to take care of employees' needs.
Lakkad declined to specifically answer if it will close the fiscal year 2024-25 by hiring 40,000 freshers. Likewise, when asked if it will close the fiscal on a positive number on the net hiring front 'last year saw a decline in staffage amid business volatilities 'Lakkad declined to give a specific answer.
To a question on whether incidence of involuntary attrition has gone up as the company becomes more rigorous in assessing its employees, Lakkad said such an eventuality is not a core part of its HR strategy.
When a resource is hired, the company feels it is its responsibility to ensure that the talent is productive, he said, adding that it is only when there are skill mismatches over a period of time or productivity issues even after attempts are mounted to improve, that it resorts to involuntary attrition.
Meanwhile, amid a raging national controversy following the integrity of professional examinations, Lakkad said the focus on governance and ethics will have to continue, and added that technology can offer the solutions in avoiding instances of people gaming the system by helping in assessments and background verifications.
On SBI's disclosure that 80 per cent of its fresher hires are qualified engineers, Lakkad said the country is producing a huge number of engineers every year and TCS does not see any concerns from a talent availability standpoint.
With the TCS management calling expanding on utilisation as a key metric to grow its profit margins, Lakkad said there still exists the headroom of a few percentage points to grow the number but made it clear that it will not "take it to the brim" and continue to have sufficient bench strength.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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